On 28 November 1946 King
George VI granted the 'Royal' prefix to the Corps of Royal Military Police (RMP) by Army Order 167 in recognition of its outstanding wartime record. (CRMP was chosen to avoid confusion with the
Royal Canadian Mounted Police or RCMP). Traffic Control Wing and Vulnerable Points Wing were phased out by 1946, with the latter re-appearing briefly in the Supplementary Reserve/Army Emergency Reserve between 1950 and 1961. Not all the former TA Companies survived the war intact but by April 1946 the remaining units had also been stood down. 27 Brigade Provost Section and 28 Brigade Provost Section both deployed to join the UN force in the
Korean War, suffering only one fatality during that conflict, Sergeant D. R. Kinnear. The first RMP Direct Entry Officers were accepted in 1953. From 1969 onwards four RMP members lost their lives in
Operation Banner, the British military response to the Troubles in Northern Ireland.
Elizabeth II became the Corps' Colonel-in-Chief in 1977.
Post-war Supplementary Reserve A new set of TA Companies were established for the RMP in 1947. The Supplementary Reserve was also restarted in 1949 and renamed as the Army Emergency Reserve in 1951. Numerous RMP (AER) units were raised, administered by HQ RMP AER at
Inkerman Barracks,
Woking; these included Army and Corps Provost Companies and Vulnerable Points Companies as well as SIB Sections. The RMP AER recruited heavily from ex-Regular and National Service RMP personnel, as well as the civilian Police and Automobile Association. The annual training commitment of the AER units was lower than that of the TA, with personnel only required to attend one 15-day camp each year, with no weekly or monthly continuation training. In 1951 the composition of RMP AER was as follows; The RMP (AER) Pool – comprising an establishment of 44 officers and some 830 NCOs and other ranks, who would reinforce Regular Army and TA units in the event of mobilisation for war. • Seven General Headquarters Provost Companies (240 – 246 (GHQ) Pro Coy, RMP (AER). • Two Home Command Provost Companies (153 and 154 (HC) Pro Coy, RMP (AER). • Two Port Provost Companies (2 and 3 Port Pro Coy, RMP (AER). • One Provost Signal Company (1 Prov Sig Coy, RMP (AER). • Eleven Vulnerable Points Companies (300 – 310 V P Coy, RMP (AER). • Six Special Investigation Branch Sections (81 – 86 SIS Sec, RMP (AER). By 1961 this had been reduced to 243 (GHQ) Pro Coy, 161 Force Pro Unit, 162 and 163 Rear Area Pro Unit, 1 Port Task Force Pro Coy, RMP (AER), plus 81 and 82 Det (Rear Area) SIB, RMP (AER).
Cold War to look across the
Berlin Wall from a viewing platform on the western side, 1984. In 1946 the Robertson-Malinin agreement introduced Military Missions into the post-war Control Zones of Germany. The agreements remained in force until 2 October 1990, when all three missions were deactivated on the eve of
Germany's reunification. As a result of the agreement, the
Soviet Union maintained missions (
SOXMIS) in the U.S., French and British zones. In the British sector the Soviet Mission was based in
Bünde near
Herford. British Forces maintained a mission (
BRIXMIS) in the Soviet Zone (
East Germany). The RMP had the task of policing the Soviet mission in Bünde, and this was tasked to 19 (Support) Platoon RMP, who became known as "white mice". This unit's job was to wait outside the Soviet mission until a SOXMIS vehicle appeared and then follow it. In restricted areas, Soviet vehicles were not permitted to leave the
autobahns (not even in parking areas) unless accompanied by U.S., British or French military police. In
Berlin, within 2 Regiment RMP, 247 Provost Company RMP was responsible for manning the British Sector checkpoints and Border Patrols. As part of 2 Regiment, an armed unit of German nationals, 248 German Security Unit, was maintained; its commander was a German national in the rank of Major and an RSM from a British infantry regiment acted as liaison officer. This was disbanded in 1994, when the British Garrison in Berlin was closed. A third company within the 2 Regiment was 246 Provost Company in Helmstedt.
Post-imperial conflicts RMP personnel were committed to combat guerilla forces in the
Malayan Emergency (1948-1950), whilst thirteen of its members also lost their lives in the 1963-1966
Indonesia-Malaysia confrontation and eight during anti-terrorist operations in the Suez Canal Zone (1951-1956). On 1 April 1955 a terrorist campaign was started by the Ethniki Organosis Kyprion Agoniston (
EOKA) in
Cyprus. An early casualty Major Greenaway, officer commanding 1 Division Provost Company (Detachment), who was shot in the back, paralysed and repatriated to the UK in 1955. The campaign lasted until 1959 - the RMP's nine casualties during this emergency are buried at the
Waynes Keep Cemetery in the
United Nations Buffer Zone in Cyprus: • Lance-Corporal W. R. Bell, 227 GHQ Provost Company RMP • Lance-Corporal W. N. Cameron, 51 Independent Infantry Brigade Provost Company RMP • Lance-Corporal R. J. Downing, 3 Infantry Division Provost Company RMP • Lance-Corporal R. B. Leitch, 227 Provost Company RMP • Lance-Corporal D. W. Perry, HQ 3 Brigade RMP • Lance-Corporal A. R. Shaw, 3 Independent Infantry Division Provost Company RMP • Lance-Corporal G. A. Todd • Lance-Corporal B. F. Turvey • Lance-Corporal B. D. Welsh Units of the RMP involved during the emergency were: • 1st Guards Brigade HQ RMP, Waynes Keep,
Nicosia • 1 Independent Infantry Division Provost Company (Detachment) RMP, HQ Nicosia • 3 Infantry Division Provost Company RMP,
Famagusta • No 6 Army Guard Unit RMP,
Lakatamia,
Larnaca and
Dhekelia • 227 GHQ Provost Company RMP, Nicosia, with detachments at Famagusta,
Limassol, Larnaca,
Paphos and
Kyrenia • 51 Brigade Independent Provost Company RMP • Cyprus District Provost Company An RMP unit was also based in
Nairobi during the
Mau Mau Uprising between 1952 and 1960, whilst RMP personnel were also involved in Operation Musketeer, the trigger for the
Suez Crisis in 1956. The United Nations Peacekeeping Force in Cyprus (
UNFICYP) was established in 1964 to prevent a recurrence of fighting between the Greek Cypriots and Turkish Cypriots and to contribute to the maintenance and restoration of law and order and a return to normal conditions. After the 1974 Greek coup-d'etat and the Turkish invasion of Cyprus, the UN Security Council extended and expanded the mission to prevent that Cyprus dispute turning into war. RMP have served with the Force Military Police Unit (FMPU), from the outset, whilst three RMP units were also involved in the
Aden Emergency (1964–1967): • 24 Brigade Provost Unit RMP (Falaise Barracks, Little Aden) • Port Security Force RMP (based at HMS Sheba until 1967) • Joint Services Police (Army Navy and Airforce) based at HQ P&SS Steamer Point until 1967
Falklands Conflict: Operation Corporate 160 Provost Company RMP, located in Aldershot sent a detachment with the task force for the Falklands conflict. After the Argentine forces surrendered, 5 Infantry Brigade Provost Unit RMP remained on the islands, sworn in as
Special Constables until the
Falkland Islands Police Force were able to become operational again. After the re-capture of South Georgia (
Operation Paraquat), the Argentine commander Lieutenant-Commander
Alfredo Astiz was taken to the UK and questioned by the RMP and
Sussex Police at the Keep,
Roussillon Barracks,
Chichester about the murder of Swedish and French nationals several years before. As there was no jurisdiction for
extradition to
Sweden or France, he was repatriated to
Argentina by the
International Committee of the Red Cross.
Middle East: Operation Granby In 1991, British forces as part of US-led coalition forces invaded Kuwait and Southern Iraq as part of
Operation Desert Storm. The British name for this operation was
Operation Granby. RMP units involved were: • 203 Provost Company RMP – 7th and 4th Armoured Brigades (1 (British) Armoured Division). This unit was a composite of various RMP units in
United Kingdom Land Forces and
British Forces Germany. • 174 Provost Company RMP – Force Maintenance Area, one section attached to 203 Pro. The RMP suffered one fatality: • Staff Sergeant David Tite
Absorption On 6 April 1992 the RMP lost its status as an independent corps, merging with the
Military Provost Staff Corps to form the Provost Branch of the
Adjutant General's Corps. It was, however, permitted to retain the name "Royal Military Police", together with its
cap badge and other distinctive insignia including the red cap. On 5 March 1995, the Mounted Troop was disbanded after 118 years of service to the crown and the colours.
Bosnia and Herzegovina During 1994 the British Army deployed units to
Bosnia as part of the
United Nations Protection Force (
UNPROFOR), which was later superseded by
IFOR and then
SFOR. These included: • 111 Provost Company Coy RMP – Force Military Police Unit (FMPU) support. The company was based in
Vitez,
Gornji Vakuf,
Kiseljak,
Maglaj and
Split. • Elements of 24 Airmobile Brigade Provost Unit (156 Provost Company, based in Colchester, England) provided the British Force Military Police Unit (FMPU) for UNPROFOR (UK Operation Grapple 5) between Oct 1994 and April 1995 based as above and then re-deployed as the Brigade Provost Unit when 24 Airmobile brigade deployed to Ploce in May/Jun 1995. • 115 Provost Company RMP (based in
Osnabrück, Germany) provided the British Force Military Police Unit (FMPU) for UNPROFOR (UK Operation Grapple 7) between August and December 1995 and then reverted to its unit designation of 4th (UK) Armoured Brigade Provost Unit RMP as part of IFOR until April 1996.
Kosovo (Operation AGRICOLA) On 12 June 1999, the UK sent 19,000 troops into
Kosovo as part of
KFOR. Lead units of the
5 Airborne Brigade, which included the
Royal Engineers and RMP, had to deal with booby traps in road tunnels before the Force could advance into Kosovo and seize the
Kačanik defile. ==2000-present==